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The story of the unfulfilled quest to find the biological basis of mental illness, and its profound effects on patients, families, and American society.
In the 1980s, American psychiatry announced that it was time to toss aside Freudian ideas of mental disorder because the true path to understanding and treating mental illness lay in brain science, biochemistry, and drugs. This sudden call to revolution, however, was not driven by any scientific breakthroughs. Nor was it as unprecedented as it seemed. Why had previous efforts stalled? Was this latest call really any different?
In Mind Fixers, Anne Harrington offers the first comprehensive history of the troubled search for the biological basis of mental illness. She makes clear that this story is not just about laboratories and clinical trials, but also momentous public policies, acrid professional rivalries, cultural upheavals, grassroots activism, and profit-mongering.
Harrington traces a consistent thread of over-promising and frustrated hopes. Above all, she helps us understand why psychiatry’s biological program is in crisis today, and what needs to happen next.
379 pages, Kindle Edition
First published April 16, 2019
Harvard Professor Anne Harrington avoids harsh blame of both practitioners and pharmaceutical companies. Instead, like a good-enough mother, she encourages both practitioners and pharmaceutical researchers to avoid the pitfalls of hubris and to “make a virtue of modesty.”
One criticism I have of Professor Harrington's narrative is that she failed to note that Dr. John Nathaniel Rosen had engaged in what might be called "Fraudulent Hubris." In 1971 Dr. Rosen had been named "Man of the Year" by the American Academy of Psychotherapy for his claim that he could cure schizophrenia with "direct analytic therapy," but 12 years later, on March 29, 1983, he avoided being charged with sixty-seven (67) violations of the Pennsylvania Medical practice Act and thirty-five (35) violations of the rules of the State Board of Medical Education by giving up his license to practice medicine. He had been caught lying about his professional training, but more importantly he had been physically and emotionally abusing patients at his Temple University Clinic near Philadelphia, as well as in his Florida facility.